Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- CD-Rom (1)
- Classrooms (1)
- Curricula (1)
- Distance education (1)
- Educational products (1)
-
- Engineering economics (1)
- Engineering faculties (1)
- Engineering management (1)
- Engineering management programs (1)
- Engineering students (1)
- Information technology (1)
- Knowledge acquisition (1)
- Learning systems (1)
- Management science (1)
- Personal computers (1)
- Problem solving (1)
- Project management (1)
- Societies and institutions (1)
- Students (1)
- Surveys (1)
- Videocassette recorders (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Education
Engineering Management- The Minor Of Choice, William Peterson, Paul Kauffmann, Charles Keating, Resit Unal
Engineering Management- The Minor Of Choice, William Peterson, Paul Kauffmann, Charles Keating, Resit Unal
Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications
The minor in engineering management provides several real benefits to undergraduate engineering and engineering technology students, not the least of which can be a substantially larger starting salary. The other benefits it offers students are in the skill sets developed (project management, engineering economics, organization behavior / principles of management, and either statistical concepts or decision techniques), the preparation to start an engineering management graduate degree, and the bridging of the competency gaps identified in several national surveys. This paper addresses the benefits of the minor to engineering management programs.
Systemic Issues In Asynchronous Delivery Of Graduate Engineering Management Programs, Charles Keating, David Dryer, Andres Sousa-Poza, William Peterson, Robert Safford
Systemic Issues In Asynchronous Delivery Of Graduate Engineering Management Programs, Charles Keating, David Dryer, Andres Sousa-Poza, William Peterson, Robert Safford
Engineering Management & Systems Engineering Faculty Publications
The purpose of this paper is to examine systemic issues that impact the design, delivery, and maintenance of asynchronous engineering management educational products. Asynchronous education continues to rapidly evolve as an alternative to traditional classroom delivery. An asynchronous educational system requires the effective integration of technology, supporting processes, and infrastructure design to prepare, deliver, and maintain asynchronous educational products. Currently, the technological capabilities for delivery of asynchronous education have outstripped the ability to maximize those advanced technologies. To help understand this rift between technology and our ability to deploy that technology this paper examines three critical areas. First, the distinctions …